Canadian Packaging

MRFF partners with JP Mascaro & Sons for single-stream curbside recycling in Pennsylvania

By Canadian Packaging staff   

Sustainability Plastic American Chemistry Council J.P. Mascaro & Sons Inc. Materials Recovery for the Future program Procter & Gamble Resource Recycling Systems Van Dyk Recycling Solutions

Research program announces partnership with MRFF to pilot curbside recycling of flexible plastic packaging.

WASHINGTON, DC.—The Materials Recovery for the Future (MRFF) research program has announced a new partnership with J.P. Mascaro & Sons Inc. to pilot single-stream curbside recycling of flexible plastic packaging (FPP) at its TotalRecycle materials recovery facility (MRF) in Berks County, Pennsylvania.

This will be the first pilot to demonstrate the technical and economic feasibility of recycling household FPP from municipal residential single-stream recycling programs.

“Our MRFF collaborative is excited to partner with J.P. Mascaro and demonstrate the recyclability of flexible plastic packaging. We are all committed to the success of this program and look forward to adding recycled flexible packaging into the circular economy. As a side benefit, we expect to see the quality of J.P.’s other recycling streams improve as the flexible plastics are processed,” says Steve Sikra, MRFF chairperson and associate director of global research and development for Procter & Gamble.

FPP—which includes films,wraps, bags and pouches—is not widely recycled today. As it becomes a larger part of the packaging waste stream, the need for scalable recycling collection strategies is critical to its sustainability.

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The pilot is expected to generate data to help inform municipalities and the recycling industry on the most efficient and economical ways to recycle FPP. This will turn used FPP materials, typically destined for disposal, into a bale that can be sold to a variety of end markets.

FPP is becoming a more commonly used form of packaging, thanks to its light–weight properties and enhanced product performance and protection.

According to Resource Recycling Systems (RRS) the recycling system consultancy which conducts the MRFF research program, 12 billion pounds of the material is introduced into the market for consumer use every year, and it is the fastest growing form of packaging. RRS estimates TotalRecycle will produce 3,100 tons/year of high-quality post-consumer FPP feedstock for various end market uses that are being tested.

Mascaro director of sustainability and TotalRecycle general manager Joseph P. Mascaro say: “Our company is thrilled to partner with the MRFF partners on this project. We are confident that the pilot will be successful and will generate industry data to show FPP generators, municipalities and the recycling industry that FPP can be efficiently and economically recycled and marketed instead of being landfilled.”

Van Dyk Recycling Solutions will add sophisticated sorting equipment to Mascaro’s TotalRecycle facility that will target FPP out of the single stream flow. The FPP will be identified and separated by advanced optical sorters, resulting in a new generation bale of FPP.

The pilot program will begin in late 2018 with the installation of the sorting equipment. After an internal testing period, TotalRecycle will begin accepting FPP for recycling from the municipal residents it serves. From equipment order to acceptance of FPP in curbside carts, the pilot program is expected to last two years time.

MRFF members include The Procter & Gamble Company, Target, The Dow Chemical Company, PepsiCo, Nestlé USA, Nestlé Purina PetCare, Amcor, and the American Chemistry Council. Other members include the Flexible Packaging Association, LyondellBasell Industries, The Plastics Industry Association, Sealed Air, SC Johnson, the Canadian Plastics Industry Association, and the Association of Plastic Recyclers. The research program is excited to announce Chevron Phillips Chemical Company as a new member.

Materials Recovery for the Future is an initiative of the Foundation for Chemistry Research and Initiatives, established by the American Chemistry Council.

For more information about the pilot or to learn how your company can join Materials Recovery for the Future, contact Emily Tipaldo via e-mail at emily_tipaldo@americanchemistry.com.

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